In "Policing the Crisis", Stuart Hall and his colleagues diagnosed the establishment of a "law-and-order society" in Great Britain. I transfer the research perspective of the British Cultural Studies to the dealing with the fans of the football-club Dynamo Berlin, which was strongly influenced by the Hooligan-culture of the 1980s and 1990s, and discuss the current constellations of exclusion, criminalization and practices in popular culture While most of the existing research focusses on hooligans´ discrimination of others, I emphasize the parallel process of the discrimination of hooligans. This new perspective brings to light several problematic aspects: Political maneuvers in this field appear to be rather populist, police actions are characterized by ideological and occasional personal alliances with hooligans, and far-reaching juridical decision seems tendentious and contestable.